Indigo Girls - Retrospective
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 See Larger Image | Retrospective Artist : Indigo Girls List Price : $11.98 USD Your Price : $10.99 USD ProductGroup: Music Release Date : 2000-10-03 Studio : Sony Label : Sony Avg. Customer Rating : (31 reviews)
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Reviews Customer Reviews for Retrospective Love the new songs Rating: I usually hate it when bands add new songs to "greatest hits" albums, but the last two tracks on Retrospective are great. (I know it's not technically a greatest hits album, but these are undoubtedly some of their better known songs.) If anyone's on the fence about buying this album because of the new songs, I would highly recommend it... they are right up there with the classics.
Customer Reviews for Retrospective Cd What a joyful piece of music! Rating: Though I like the Indigo Girls this was the first piece of their music I actually purchased. I LOVE IT!
This collection is such a nice compilation. There is a fine mixture of music - what is standard throughout is their perfect harmony....and those sometimes haunting, sometimes poignant lyrics.
A great purchase that I will make good use of!
Buy it - you won't be sorry!
Editorial Reviews for Retrospective Audio Cd Amazon.com essential recording Try to think of an enduring, widely respected, artistically progressive female songwriting duo. Now, try to think of one besides the Indigo Girls. Amy Ray and Emily Saliers have been pounding the folk-rock pavement since the early 1980s, filling the ears of eager listeners with their ethereal harmonies, lush arrangements, and evocative lyrics. Retrospective traces their progression from budding singer-songwriters to stunning musicians, arrangers, activists, and artists. Progressing chronologically, the album allows the listener to appreciate the depth and breadth of the pair's musical growth--from the reedy, passionate plea of "Strange Fire" to the blithe bounce of "Least Complicated" to the dark electricity of "Go." As time passes, more instruments are added, more sensitive political topics are addressed, and more experimental techniques are incorporated. The two new cuts--Ray's uptempo but slightly turbulent "Devotion" and Saliers's heartfelt road ballad "Leaving"--are reminiscent of the Girls' younger days but also reflect their artistic growth through subtle lyrical turns and deft melodic variations. --Sally Weinbach
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